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P J Owen a Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Health
Authority, St Austell, Cornwall PL25 4NQ, b Childhood Cancer
Research Group, Department of Paediatrics, University of Oxford, Oxford
OX2 6HJ Correspondence to: P J
Owen Pat.Owen{at}ciosha.cornwall.nhs.uk
Twenty tonnes of aluminium sulphate were inadvertently
emptied into the water supply at the Lowermoor treatment works in north Cornwall on 6 July 1988. The maximum recorded aluminium concentration was 620 000 µg/l compared with the maximum concentration
admissible at the time by the European Community of 200 µg/l.1
Highly acidic water entered the system, which distributed water to
12 000 local residents. The extent of the pollution was not fully
realised for some days, and many residents received water containing
large quantities of aluminium and also copper, lead, and zinc, which
the acid had caused to leach from pipes.
A panel of experts produced two reports on the
incident
2 3
; one of the recommendations was that deaths
should be monitored by flagging the health records of residents. The
Office for National Statistics flagged records of all residents in the
entire postcode sector receiving water from the treatment works; this
included people who had not received polluted water. The development of more accurate postcoding has enabled the residents to be split into two
groups: those who were supplied by the treatment works and those who
were not.
We analysed records of deaths in the population whose records were
flagged between July 1988 and December 1997. A previous paper discussed
the hospital discharge rates.4
We compared mortality in the area with water pollution
(n=11 114) with that in an adjacent area free of pollution
(n=5359). We also compared death rates with those in Cornwall and the
Isles of Scilly, and England and Wales. We corrected death rates
for differences in age distribution and sex.
The ratio of the standardised mortality ratios (standardised
to England and Wales) for the exposed and unexposed cohorts was 1.08 (95% confidence interval 0.97 to 1.21) (table); the exposed group had
higher mortality, but the excess was not statistically significant.
Compared with deaths in Cornwall as a whole, the number of deaths
in the exposed group was lower than expected each year: fewer than
expected died in the exposed group. The standardised mortality ratio
for the exposed population for 1988-97 was 81.6 (77.2 to 86.2), using
mortality rates for Cornwall as the standard, and 77.7 (73.5 to 82.0)
with England and Wales as standard. For both standards of comparison,
significantly fewer people died than expected.
We found no statistically significant difference in deaths between
the cohort exposed to aluminium sulphate in their water and the
non-exposed cohort. The cohort exposed to the pollution had
significantly lower mortality than the population of Cornwall and that
of England and Wales. This may be because the area has generally low
levels of deprivation and historically low death rates. Mortality in
the population will continue to be monitored.
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Methods and results
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Methods and results
Comment
References
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Comment
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Methods and results
Comment
References
Our register of flagged people is incomplete: we may have
underestimated the number of deaths in the exposed area and non-exposed area, but this would not be large enough to invalidate our conclusions. The problem is the time interval between the pollution incident in 1988 and the recommendation to flag records in 1991: some people moved away
from the area and others moved in. The registration system that the
health service had in place at the time did not fully correct for this.
It did, however, allow recording of all people still resident at the
same address, those who had left Cornwall, and those moving only once
within Cornwall
that is, most of those moving.
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: DM initiated and coordinated the study and wrote the paper. PO collected the data, performed analysis, and wrote the paper. GD and TV analysed the data and wrote the paper. PO is guarantor.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: The Childhood Cancer Research Group is supported by the Department for Health for England and Wales and the Scottish Executive Health Department. The flagging of the records was paid for by the Department of Health.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. | Rowland A, Grainger R, Smith RS, Hicks N, Hughes A. Water contamination in north Cornwall: a retrospective cohort study into the acute and short-term effects of the aluminium sulphate incident in July 1988. J R Soc Health 1990; 110: 166-172[Web of Science][Medline]. |
| 2. | Lowermoor Incident Health Advisory Group. Water pollution at Lowermoor, north Cornwall. Truro: Cornwall and Isles of Scilly District Health Authority, 1989. |
| 3. | Lowermoor Incident Health Advisory Group. Water pollution at Lowermoor, north Cornwall. Second report. London: Stationery Office, 1990. |
| 4. |
Owen PJ, Miles DPB.
A review of hospital discharge rates in a population around Camelford in north Cornwall up to the fifth anniversary of an episode of aluminium sulphate absorption.
J Public Health Med
1995;
17:
200-204 |
(Accepted 13 November 2001)
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